St. Bride by John Duncan, 1913
Misplaced Lens Cap

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St. Bride by John Duncan, 1913
Self-Portrait with his Wife and a Glass of Champagne, 1902, Lovis Corinth
https://www.wikiart.org/en/lovis-corinth/self-portrait-with-his-wife-and-a-glass-of-champagne-1902
Chad impressionist
More seriously though, I love the way Lovis Corinth painted his wife.
Rachael House, To Be Normal Is Not a Healthy Aspiration, 2011
Hajime Sorayama, ‘Jeanne d'Arc’, 2019 Source Featured in the exhibit ‘Paintings of Cruelty and Beauty’ at the Vanilla Gallery in Tokyo, Japan.
Henry Darger In the realms of the unreal (detail) ~1910-1932 15,145-page text with illustrations watercolor
“The goddesses of fate” S.Plutenko.
“Богини судьбы“ C.Плутенко
Some of my favourite requiem chasubles. We never see priests wearing anything like this anymore. Memento mori!
Yet another reason it’s unfair that women can’t be priests
Paintings by Uzbek artist Saira Keltaeva.
Takato Yamamoto, The Annunciation
Berthe Morisot (1841–1895)
“It is important to express oneself… provided the feelings are real and are taken from your own experience.“
Panel 1. Eros is Struck by Psyche’s Beauty, 1908, Maurice Denis
Cashmere Cape, ca. 1912
Reville & Rossiter Ltd.
via Vintage Martini
American Duchess recently posted a free pattern for this, along with instructions, if anyone’s looking to sew it!
Somnambulant, 1871, Ivan Kramskoi
https://www.wikiart.org/en/ivan-kramskoy/somnambulant-1871
Alexandra Kehayoglou crafts wool rugs as unique works of art, with a hand-tufting process that takes several months to complete. Using discarded thread from her family’s carpet factory in Buenos Aires, she describes her rugs as portals to memories, with a direct connection to her Greek grandparents’ past weaving of Ottoman-style carpets in Turkey.
She really creates some kind of day dream with her work. It’s not just beauitiful, it doesn’t make you think, you automatically get dragged into another world. Her work has impact.
Front-line work of the German artist Martin Frost.
“Grenade fight. World War I”
Barbara Kruger’s never really talked about Supreme, the skate company who’s been ripping off her ideas and prints letter for letter, color for color, for their red-and-white logo, which you have seen, because it is everywhere.
I emailed her casually to ask her about this. And today, she got back to me, and gave a candid statement on the matter of Supreme for the first time, ever, really. By emailing me a blank email, with an attachment. Which you can see above.
an iconic moment in art history
the dedication to her font is incredible i love this so much
Fusion Frames by Darryl Cox Fuse Gnarled Tree Roots with Ornate Picture Frames
Awsome!